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- Description:
- George W. Braswell, Jr. was Professor of Missions and World Religion. The service begins with organ music (00:00-02:45). The speaker announces community concerns, and she gives a word of prayer (02:46-05:30). The choir sings the anthem (05:31-08:00). Braswell gives a report about the Southeastern summer mission trips and church planting endeavors in North America (08:01-10:59). The first student, Mickey, shares his experience serving a church plant in Daytona Beach, FL (11:00-15:17). Fred and Sherry, a married couple, share about their mission experience in Durham, NC through poetry (15:18-18:01). Bill Long, praxis director of the Home Mission Board, shares the need of students for the next summer mission trips, and he invites the audience to an interest meeting after the service (18:02-24:10). The service ends with a hymn and a word of prayer (24:11-26:18).
- Subject:
- Church development, New, Religious poetry, and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Braswell, George W., Jr., 1936-
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 3, 1985
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_George_W_Braswell_Jr_1985-09-03
- Description:
- Motlaepula Chabaku was a South African refugee. The service begins with announcements over community concerns, and the speaker gives a word of prayer (00:00-02:35). Motlalepula Chabaku is introduced as the Missionary Day speaker (02:36-04:09). Chabaku reads from Matthew 4:18-21 and Luke 8:1-3, and she speaks at length about how the inequality of race, gender, and economic status seen, not only in her home country of South Africa but all over the world, is contrary to the Scriptures and the justice of God (04:10-34:51). The service ends with an invitation and a last word from Chabaku about a hymn that changed her life (34:52-38:20).
- Subject:
- Christianity and justice, Apartheid--South Africa, and Missions
- Creator:
- Chabaku, Motlalepula and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 17, 1985
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Motlalepula_Chabaku_1985-09-17
- Description:
- Lena and Paul Early were missionaries to the Bahamas. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-01:09). Lena and Paul Early are introduced as the Missionary Day speakers (01:10-03:28). Lena Early shares of God’s faithfulness throughout her life in her call to missions and her commitment to ministry (03:29-15:14). Paul Early reads from Mark 10:35-45, and he diagnosis a sickness in the Southern Baptist Convention of the sin of self-love and pompous pride (15:15-29:22). The service ends with a word of prayer (29:23-30:13).
- Subject:
- Pride and vanity--Religious aspects--Christianity, God--Faithfulness, and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Early, Lena, and Early, Paul
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- November 26, 1985
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Lena_and_Paul_Early_1985-11-26
- Description:
- Dorothy Elliott Sample was president of the Women’s Missionary Union of the Southern Baptist Convention. The service begins with organ music (00:00-08:41). The speaker gives a word of prayer (08:42-10:42). Dorothy Elliott Sample is introduced as the Missionary Day speaker (10:43-12:50). The choir sings the anthem (12:51-15:19). Samples speaks about the Southern Baptist’s commitment to missions, and she encourages the audience to live for Christ in the world, give to foreign missions, and consider going to the nations (15:20-44:54). The service ends with a benediction (44:55-45:32).
- Subject:
- Lay ministry--Southern Baptist Convention, Great Commission (Bible), and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Sample, Dorothy Elliott, 1938-
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- November 27, 1984
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Dorothy_Elliott_Sample_1984-11-27
- Description:
- Pablo Alberto Deiros was Professor of Church History at The International Baptist Seminary in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The service begins with organ music (00:00-06:26). The speaker delivers a reading from the Psalms, and he gives a word of prayer (06:27-08:58). The speaker gives a word of thanks to those who volunteered to help those on the North Carolina coast who suffered from a hurricane, and Pablo Alberto Deiros is introduced as the Missionary Day speaker (08:59-14:19). The choir sings the anthem (14:20-17:14). Deiros preaches about the meaning of the Great Commission, and he explains a Christological vision of missions where believers are to live like Christ and make him real to the world they are reaching (17:15-47:02). The service ends with a word of prayer (47:03-47:41).
- Subject:
- Jesus Christ--Person and offices, Great Commission (Bible), and Missions
- Creator:
- Deiros, Pablo Alberto, 1945- and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 18, 1984
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Pablo_Alberto_Deiros_1984-09-18
- Description:
- R. Quinn Pugh was the Executive Director of the Metropolitan New York Baptist Association and the Executive Treasure of the Baptist Convention of New York. The service begins with organ music (00:00-00:56). There is a responsive reading, and the speaker gives a word of prayer (00:57-02:45). R. Quinn Pugh is introduced as the Missionary Day chapel speaker (02:46-04:55). The choir sings the anthem (04:56-07:30). Pugh begins his sermon with a word of prayer (07:31-08:24). Pugh speaks about the rural-urban divide in American society, and he encourages the audience to listen to God’s call of potentially doing ministry in urban areas such as New York City (08:25-46:54). Pugh ends the service with a word of prayer (46:55-48:21).
- Subject:
- City clergy, Rural-urban divide, and Missions
- Creator:
- Pugh, R. Quinn and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- January 24, 1984
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_R_Quinn_Pugh_1984-01-24
- Description:
- Edna Francis Dawkins was the Fletcher Visiting Professor of Missions. The service begins with a responsive reading, the speaker reads from Ephesians, and a word of prayer is given (00:00-03:36). E.F. Dawkins is introduced as the chapel speaker (03:37-08:30). The choir sings the anthem (08:31-11:35). Dawkins shares multiple stories about her experiences and the people she met on the mission field, and she asks the audience for prayers and to consider the potential opportunity to go to the field (11:36-37:06). The service ends with a word of prayer (37:07-38:16).
- Subject:
- Missionary stories, Prayer, and Missions
- Creator:
- Dawkins, E. F. and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 20, 1983
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_E_F_Dawkins_1983-09-20
- Description:
- J. Ralph Noonkester was the President of William Carey College. The service begins with organ music (00:00-03:11). The speaker leads the audience in a responsive reading, and he gives a word of prayer (03:12-04:40). J. Ralph Noonkester is introduced as the chapel speaker (04:41-06:41). The choir sings the anthem (06:42-09:59). Noonkester begins his sermon by speaking about how so many of his former classmates and professor have ended up becoming part of the faculty and staff of Southeastern (10:00-12:24). Noonkester titles his sermon “Old Wine in New Skins,” and he speaks about the importance of Christian collegiate education for missions to the marginalized and the training of the laymen (12:25-42:01). The service ends with a benediction (42:02-42:40).
- Subject:
- Christian education, Education, Higher, and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Noonkester, J. Ralph
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- November 29, 1983
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_J_Ralph_Noonkester_1983-11-29
- Description:
- Donald Kammerdiener was the Middle America and Caribbean Area Director for the Home Mission Board. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-01:30). Donald Kammerdiener is introduced as the Missionary Day speaker (01:31-04:57). Kammerdiener recounts Jacob’s dream from Genesis 28:10-22, and he speaks about the urgency of not missing encounters with God and his vision for the world (04:58-22:32). Kammerdiener ends the service with a word of prayer (22:33-23:04).
- Subject:
- Jacob's ladder (Biblical dream), Experience (Religion), and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Kammerdiener, Donald
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 21, 1983
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Donald_Kammerdiener_1983-09-21
- Description:
- Orlando E. Costas was the Thornley B. Wood Professor of Missiology at Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary, now Palmer Theological Seminary. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-00:53). Orlando E. Costas is introduced as the Page Lecturer (00:54-02:19). Costas begins his lecture by speaking about the importance of Galilee as the land on the periphery of Jewish as a liberation metaphor for Christ’s mission to save the poor and outcast of society (02:20-10:57). His first point is that Jesus’ mission in Galilee shows the reader that gospel missions should have its base in the periphery of society because it can challenge the central powers (10:58-17:14). Costas second point is that missions is a personal and public message for all human beings, and he says that when the multitudes are evangelized, creation hears about it (17:15-28:49). Costas third point is that missions has a global scope, and the country song “In an Old Shanty Town” is played (28:50-42:25). A time of Q&A is opened for the audience, and the first question is about the interpretation of the Bible for the current context (42:26-46:59). The service ends with an announcement and a word of prayer (47:00-47:53).
- Subject:
- Liberation theology, Jesus Christ--Person and offices, and Missions
- Creator:
- Costas, Orlando E. and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- October 6, 1982
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Page_Lecture_Orlando_Costas_1982-10-06
- Description:
- Orlando E. Costas was the Thornley B. Wood Professor of Missiology at Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary, now Palmer Theological Seminary. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-02:19). Orlando E. Costas is introduced as the Page Lecturer (02:20-05:49). Costas begins his lecture by giving a warm greeting from the faculty of Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary (05:50-07:07). Costas describes Jesus’ life situation as presented in the Gospel of Mark, and he compares Jesus’ experience as a Galilean to Hispanic Americans in the present day who are separated from their brothers and sisters in Latin America (07:08-26:28). Costas second part of his lecture is about Jesus using Galilee as his mission field and his launching pad for the church (26:39-44:54). The speaker ends the service with a benediction (44:55-45:57).
- Subject:
- Jesus Christ--Person and offices, Israel--Galilee, and Missions
- Creator:
- Costas, Orlando E. and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- October 5, 1982
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Page_Lecture_Orlando_Costas_1982-10-05
- Description:
- Ann Neil was the Fletcher Visiting Professor of Missions. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-03:00). Ann Neil is introduced as the Missionary Day speaker (03:01-05:50). The choir sings the anthem (05:51-10:01). Neil’s sermon topic is “women in missions,” and she traces the history of Southern Baptist women’s involvement in missions and the stories of prominent women whose work had great impact on the field (10:02-31:04). Neil concludes her sermon by speaking about the current situation of women who are missionaries and the need to bring them into staff position in global missions’ organizations (31:05-39:57). Neil ends the service with a word of prayer (39:58-40:30).
- Subject:
- Church representation, Women in the Southern Baptist Convention, and Missions
- Creator:
- Neil, Ann and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 21, 1982
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Ann_Neil_1982-09-21
- Description:
- Pam and Mark Grumbles were missionaries in Costa Rica. The service begins with a word of prayer (00:00-01:07). The speaker delivers the Scripture reading from Isaiah 6:1-8 and Matthew 9:35-38 (01:08-04:30). Pam and Mark Grumbles are introduced as the Missionary Day speakers (04:31-05:46). The Grumbles share the testimony of their call to foreign missions and their journey to becoming missionaries in Paraguay and now, after seminary, Costa Rica (05:47-33:19).
- Subject:
- Missionaries' spouses, Witness bearing (Christianity), and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Grumbles, Pam, and Grumbles, Mark
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- November 30, 1982
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Pam_and_Mark_Grumbles_1982-11-30
- Description:
- Chapel begins with a reading of Romans 10:9-17 (0:00-2:00). A prayer is given (2:00-2:50). Time of singing “This is My Story” (2:50-5:57). A speaker tells the story of his conversion, journey to Southeastern from Africa, the growth of his theology over that time, and the importance of taking the gospel to the world (5:57-16:22). Another speaker from Venezuela shares what it means to be a Christian in Latin America (16:22-29:21). This same speaker closes chapel in prayer (19:21-30:01).
- Subject:
- Theology, Christianity--Latin America, and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- March 1, 1983
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_International_Students_1983-03-01
- Description:
- Christine Gregory was the First Vice President of the Southern Baptist Convention. The service begins with President Randall Lolley giving a word of prayer (00:00-01:01). Christine Gregory is introduced as the chapel speaker (01:02-05:41). The choir sings a song of worship (05:42-08:43). Gregory speaks positively about Southern Baptist’s motivations for the Great Commission and history of involvement in the missions movement, and she says that despite their differences, Southern Baptists need to quit talking to each other, take initiative, and win the world for Christ (08:44-32:49). Lolley thanks Gregory for speaking, and he gives an announcement about chapel being moved to Wake Forest Baptist Church in the coming weeks due to construction (32:50-34:40). Lolley ends the service with a word of prayer (34:41-35:15).
- Subject:
- Witness bearing (Christianity)--Baptists, Women in church work--Southern Baptist Convention, and Missions
- Creator:
- Gregory, Christine and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- January 27, 1982
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_Christine_Gregory_1982-01-27
- Description:
- Lewis Addition Drummond was the 4th president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Professor of the History and Theology of Evangelism. The service opens with a word of prayer from Dr. George Braswell (00:00-02:14). President Lewis A. Drummond gives a word of greeting for the day of convocation for the inauguration of the Center for Great Commission Studies, and he introduces the seminar leaders and plenary speaker, all the conference attendees, and the board of trustees (02:15-06:25). Dr. Wayne McDill briefly speaks about the importance of evangelism, the Great Commission, and missions for Southern Baptists and Southeastern Seminary, and he presents a theme for the convocation service of “Heart for the World” (06:26-11:25). Drummond reads from Matthew 28:16-20, and he begins his sermon with his first point that the fulfilment of the Great Commission comes through the power of the Holy Spirit (11:26-18:17). Drummond’s second point is that God calls us to make disciples and not decisions, and he says that the power of the gospel message is Jesus Christ and his defeat of death in the resurrection (18:18-26:36). Drummond’s third point is that we are to baptize converts into the community of God and teach them the Scriptures, and he says that God desires believers to know and be like Jesus Christ (26:37-32:35). Drummond’s final point is that we need the presence of God, and he says God’s presence must reach the ends of the earth (32:36-37:15). Drummond concludes his sermon with a Great Commission litany (37:16-39:56). Dr. Delos Miles closes the convocation with a benediction (39:57-40:33).
- Subject:
- Great Commission (Bible), Evangelistic work, and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Drummond, Lewis A.
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- April 16, 1991
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Convocation_Lewis_Addison_Drummond_1991-04-16
- Description:
- Cecil D. Etheridge was a missionary of the Home Mission Board. The service begins with flute and organ music (00:00-02:59). Professor Glenn Miller reads from Matthew 9, and he gives a word of prayer (03:00-05:20). Cecil D. Etheridge is introduced as the Missionary Day chapel speaker (05:21-05:57). The choir sings a song of worship (05:58-09:00). Etheridge speaks about the ministering with a visible faith and a hurting world, and many of the stories and examples he shares deal with overcoming the issues of race in while on mission (09:01-33:24). The service ends with a benediction (33:25-33:58).
- Subject:
- Pain--Treatment--Law and legislation, Faith, Race relations, and Missions
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Etheridge, Cecil D.
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- January 27, 1981
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Cecil_D_Etheridge_1981-01-27
- Description:
- Hugo H. Culpepper was Professor of Missions at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. The service begins with organ music and a word of prayer (00:00-09:22). Hugo H. Culpepper is introduced as the Missionary Day chapel speaker (09:23-13:47). The choir sings a song of worship (13:48-17:12). Culpepper begins his sermon by stating his theme of the spiritual pilgrimage of a missionary (17:13-20:47). Culpepper gives the steps of the spiritual pilgrimage of a missionary which includes the church, the conversion experience, the Holy Spirit, the word of God, Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, and the character of God himself, and he uses his own life as the model for this pilgrimage (20:48-56:07). Culpepper concludes his sermon with a word of prayer (56:08-57:24). The service ends with organ music and a benediction (57:25-58:16).
- Subject:
- Missionary stories, Christian pilgrims and pilgrimages, and Missions
- Creator:
- Culpepper, Hugo H., 1913- and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- April 21, 1981
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Missionary_Day_Address_Hugo_H_Culpepper_1981-04-21